Uganda

FAOoftheUN 5,417 views 46 slides Sep 21, 2015
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About This Presentation

http://www.fao.org/globalsoilpartnership
This presentation was made during the African Soil Prtnership consulation workshop which took a place in Ghana, 20-22 May 2015. This presentation was made by Zakayo Muyaka, and it presents the priorities for SSM in Uganda.

©FAO: http://www.fao.org


Slide Content

THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA


PRIORITIES FOR SUSTAINABLE SOIL MANAGEMENT
IN UGANDA

A Presentation at
The African Soil Partnership
By
Zakayo Muyaka, Assistant Commissioner, Soil & Water Conservation,
Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Industry & Fisheries, Uganda

The Pearl Of
Africa
Good climate and fertile soils
UGANDA

Location
•Uganda is a landlocked country located in East
Africa between latitude 1⁰ South and 4⁰ North
and longitude 30⁰ -35⁰ East.
•It is bordered by Tanzaniain in the South,
Kenya in the East, Sudan to the North,
Democratic Republic in the West and Rwanda
in the Southwest.

Area
•It covers 142,000 square Kilometers.
•About 21% of the land is cultivated.
•45% of the country is woodland and grassland.
However some of this has been cleared for
roads, settlements and farmland.
•13% of the country has been set aside for
national parks, forests and game reserves.

Climate
•Uganda has an equatorial climate moderated by
altitude.
•Rainfall is well distributed throughout the country
except in the northeastern corner.
•The mean annual rainfall ranges from 500mm in
the northeast (Karamoja region ) to 2100mm in
the Lake Victoria region in the southeast.
•Mean annual temperatures range from about 16
degres in the southwestern highlands to 25
degrees in the north west; but in the northeast,
temperatures exceed 30 degrees centigrade
about 254 days per year.

Population
•The population is about 34 millions with a growth
rate of 3.2 % per annum. About 80% live in the
rural areas and derive their livelihoods from
agriculture.
•The majority of the farmers are smallholders with
an average land size of about 2 ha.
•Large oil deposits have been discovered. Other
natural resource include forests, cement, cobalt,
copper, gold, timber, marble, wild life.

Agriculture
•Agriculture contributes about 26% to GDP, the largest
sources of export earnings, about 53% of export
earning from 2007 – 2012/13 and employs over
75% of the labor force, provides raw materials for
agro based industries.
•It is the main driver to economic development of the
country
•Uganda has a potential to produce a range of crops.
Major cash crops include coffee, Oil palm, cocoa, cotton,
tea, sugarcane and food crops includes; rice, bananas,
maize, wheat, potatoes, sunflower, sorghum, cassava,
fruits e.g. Oranges, mangoes, apples & horticultural
crops.
•Over 60% of the crops are grown mainly for food.

Soils of Uganda
(By NARO)

Status of Land Degradation
•About 46% of Uganda’s soils are degraded and 10% is very
degraded
•Costs of natural resources degradation in the country
estimated at 17% of GDP per year
•Key drivers for land degradation and low productivity on
smallscale farms are lack of labour and capital to invest in
sustaible land management, poverty and land fragmentation
leading to over exploitation of land.
•Major forms of land degradation are soil erosion, decreasing
soil fertility, bush burning, overgrazing, overcultivation, soil
mining, landslides, agrochemicals pollution and deforestation.
•Main causes are high population growth rate leading to
deforestation and encroachment of wetlands, poor methods
of cultivation, bush burning, overgrazing.

Land degradation effects expressed via declining yields, rural poverty, food insecurity, high cost of food etc

Lake Victoria
Crescent
•Most urbanized
region and
therefore with high
population
•Extensive
pressure on land
and lake based
resources
•Point and non-
point pollution of
Lake Victoria

Bears the
greatest impacts
of land
degradation
The Cattle
Corridor

Characterized
by low
population
density, low
market access
and low agro-
ecological
potential
.

Degradation in Cattle Corridor

Eastern and
Northern
Uganda

Inherently low
soil fertility and
nutrient
depletion is
extreme
The poorest
Households
reduced fallow
periods,
deforestation,
and extensive
drainage of
wetlands.

Lake Victoria
Crescent
•Most urbanized
region and
therefore with high
population
•Extensive
pressure on land
and lake based
resources
•Point and non-
point pollution of
Lake Victoria

Southwestern
and Eastern
Highlands
high population
density;
extensive land
fragmentation;
High risk of
erosion

Degradation
of terraces
Terraces in
western Uganda
being eroded

Erosion by
Rivers
Erosion destroying
crops, infrastructure,
buildings, etc

Eastern and
Northern
Uganda

Inherently low
soil fertility and
nutrient
depletion is
extreme
The poorest
Households
reduced fallow
periods,
deforestation,
and extensive
drainage of
wetlands.

Indiscriminate burning

Institutional Arrangement
•In the Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Industry &
Fisheries (MAAIF), Soil and Water Conservation and
Water for Agricultural Production are under the
Department of Infrastructural Development (Farm
Development).
•Government ministries and government agencies such
as Ministry of Water & Environment, Ministry of Energy
& Mineral Development, NEMA,etc.
•Research Institutions
•Academia Public & private Universities and institutions,
schools & colleges

Institutional Arrangements (Cont’d)
•Non Government Organizations e.g. Rural
Enterprise Services Ltd, WWF, IUCN, IIRR, etc
•Faith based Organizations
•Donor sponsored projects that have been
sponsored by COMESA, UNDP, Ireland,
Norway, World Bank, etc

Policy environment to address soil
degradation
Development of enabling environment for
proper land use and management include
The National Land Use Policy; The Land Policy;
The Draft National Soils Policy for Uganda; The
Prohibition of the Burning of Grass Act; Cattle
Grazing Act; The National Environment
Management Policy for Uganda (1994);The
National Environment (Minimum Standards
for Management of Soil Quality) Regulations;
National Forestry and Tree Planting Act;
Regulations on Mountainous and Hilly Areas;
Regulations on Wetlands, Riverbanks and
Lakeshores

Priorities for Sustainable Soil
Management
•. Development of Land Suitability maps and Land Use
Plans
• Updating the soils information/mapping
• Develop and operationalize of watershed
management plans
•Developing Climate Smart Agriculture Programme
•Promotion of Sustainable Land Management
Sustainable Land Management Practices/ Climate
Smart Agriculture
• Rehabilitation/restoration of degraded agricultural
landscapes

Priorities Cont’d
• Increase tree cover on agricultural landscape
through promotion of agro forestry and
afforestation with at least 60 tree nurseries.
Strengthen and train cooperatives/groups in the
development of SLM friendly value chains in
• Support development of local community
alternative livelihood initiatives.
• Support communities to adopt wood fuel saving
technologies
• Completion of fertilizer policy
•Develop climate agriculture smart programme

Priorities (cont’d)
•Mainstream sustainable soil management in
agricultural sector development plan
•Developing guidelines to mainstream climate
change issues in agricultural sector
•Development of Climate Smart Agriculture
Programme is in progress
•Developing Fertilizer policy to improve access
to fertilizers to restore degraded soils

Draft National Irrigation Policy

Government Budget for SLM
The multispectral Uganda Investment
framework for Sustainable Land Management
Investment Framework will cost US$
245,305,000 for 10 years

Some ongoing/Ended Donor
supported projects
•NB: These projects are small and cover small
areas of the country but doing tremendous work
•MoFPED to various ministries and agencies
•A 5-year Agricultural Technology and Agribusiness
Advisory Services project (ATAAS) SLM
Component of US $ 7,200,000 -2012-2016 (on
going)
•A 4-year GEF- UNDP funded- SLM project to
overcome land degradation in the cattle corridor”
of US $ 1,830,730 from GEF (2011- 2015)
(ongoing)

Ongoing projects (Cont’d)
•FAO in drought resilience, climate change, and slm
•A 4 –year (2014- 2017) GEF-UNDP project US $
3,000,000 Addressing barriers to adoption of improved
charcoal production technologies and sustainable land
management practices through an integrated
approach”
•A COMESA-UNDP FAO project for Enhancing
Adaptation to Climate Smart Agriculture now on- going
in five districts of Eastern Uganda of US $1,000,000
from Norway, DFID,EU(2012-2015)
•Ecosystem-based adaptation (EBA) project for Mt.
Elgon A US $ 2.3m

Some projects (cont’d)
•A 3 year (2012- 2014) GEF/UNEP Stimulating Community
Initiatives in Sustainable Land Management (SCI-SLM)
project – US $100,000
•A 4 year (2011- 2014) UNDP project on Improving Policies
and Strategies for Sustainable Environment, Natural
Resources and Climate Risk Management implemented
country-wide.
•Strengthening Sustainable Environment, Natural Resources
Management, Climate change Adaptation and Mitigation in
Uganda (UNDP/WWF SENRMCAM Project) (ending )
•A 4-year SLM Mainstreaming Project funded by the
Government of Norway and the UNDP/DDC to the tune of
US $ 4,430,730 (2010- 2013) –cattle corridor. (ended)

Some projects Cont’d
•A 5 year (2014-2018) UNDP/GEF Strengthening
Climate Information and Early Warning Systems
in Uganda US $ 4 million (on going)
•Kagera Trans-boundary Agro-escosystem
Management Project
•Some projects by AGRA on soil mapping
•Initiatives by various NGOs like WWF, REDS and
PELUM (Participatory Ecological Land Use
Management) a regional Association in East
Central and Southern Africa

Technologies
being promoted
under CSA

Include improved farming
methods e.g. Mulching,
Crop rotation, Fallowing,
Integrated soil nutrient
and pest management
practices for water
retention and maintaining
soil structure and soil
biodiversity and improved
yields. About 1million
farmers are targeted under
CSA in 10 years time

Contour Strip Farming

Minimum Soil Disturbance e.g. Basin
planting and ripping

Contour Hedgerows and retention
ditches

Fuel saving technologies
to conserve wood fuel and save our forests

Agro forestry

Night Kraaling to Restore Degraded
Rangelands

Integrated mulching and drip
irrigation giving more yields

Some of the Strategies Being Used
•Multi-sectoral approach involving various
ministries, NGOs, Faith based organization,
research, academia, etc
•A multi- sectoral approach involving all state
and non state stakeholders
•Research in soil management practices
•Soil fertility mapping one out of sixteen maps
done by NARO
•Mainstreaming sustainable soil management
in all government sectors that deal with
natural resources
•Integrated soil nutrient management

Building capacities of
Central & local
governments, and
NGOs
. Recruiting more staff
at central and local
governments.
Training of
. Central and local
government staff
. NGOs
.Teachers
.Faith based
organizations

Involvement
of schools
. Training staff
. Training students
.Developing school
curriculum for
conservation smart
agriculture

Involvement of
women, youth
and other
vulnerable groups
in sustainable soil
management

Women play
the biggest
role in
agriculture

Use of Volunteers

Some Constraints to Addressing Land
Degradation
•Inadequate investment in sustainable soil management and
alternative livelihoods
•Poverty and high dependency on extraction of NR for
income
•High cost of external inputs e.g. fertilizers and water
harvesting facilities
•Limited knowledge of Sustainable Soil Management
•Inadequate extension services
•Limited research capacity
•Use of rudimentary tools
•Lack of credit facilities and high interest rates where credit
is available
•Inadequate incentives for the private sector to provide
services in sustainable soil management

Looking forward to
rehabilitated, preserved,
protected and developed
soils for a health and
prosperous human race and
environment

THANK YOU